2026 includes a significant number of high‑profile celebrity weddings that have already been publicly discussed or reported, sitting on top of a few recent ceremonies that helped set the visual template for what these events look like now. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are among the most covered couples, with Elle reporting that they “don’t want a long engagement” and are already looking ahead to a 2026 ceremony, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce ‘Don’t Want a Long Engagement’ as They Plan for a 2026 Wedding and Kids. Recent coverage of Sofia Richie and Elliot Grainge’s 2023 wedding at Hotel du Cap‑Eden‑Roc in the South of France, framed as a “quiet luxury” benchmark, is still shaping how celebrity and wedding outlets talk about the look and feel of big‑ticket ceremonies.
Other widely mentioned 2026 pairings include Cristiano Ronaldo and Georgina Rodríguez, Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco, and several royal and influencer couples, all of whom appear on lists of anticipated ceremonies compiled by entertainment and lifestyle outlets. Kelly Osbourne and Sid Wilson, who became engaged at Ozzy Osbourne’s final show, have discussed holding more than one wedding to accommodate different locations and groups, adding to the sense that some of this year’s ceremonies are being treated as multi‑chapter events instead of single nights.

Visually, the look of these weddings tends to echo the same mood boards: outdoor or indoor‑outdoor venues, neutral palettes, heavy florals, and editorial‑style photography that makes the whole thing feel like a fashion campaign. Sofia Richie and Elliot Grainge’s neutral‑toned, “quiet luxury” wedding is a reference point here, with fashion and wedding outlets still citing it as a model for how to stage a large‑scale but controlled‑feeling celebration, down to dress silhouettes and table settings.
Across fashion and wedding media, outlets such as Vogue, regional Vogue editions, and wedding‑focused sites are already pulling these announcements into running round‑ups of 2026 engagements and upcoming ceremonies. Those pieces treat the weddings as part of a broader calendar for the year—more like a season of premieres than a handful of one‑off events—slotting each couple’s plans into an informal “wedding season” that runs alongside the rest of the 2026 pop‑culture schedule